[Alice of Old Vincennes by Maurice Thompson]@TWC D-Link bookAlice of Old Vincennes CHAPTER IV 7/23
You were the prettiest dancer them all, and the young fellows all went to the swords about you!" "But tell me more," Alice insisted; "I want to know about what you saw in the great towns--in the fine houses--how the ladies looked, how they acted--what they said--the dresses they wore--how--" "Ciel! you will split my ears, child; can't you fill my pipe and bring it to me with a coal on it? Then I'll try to tell you what I can," he cried, assuming a humorously resigned air.
"Perhaps if I smoke I can remember everything." Alice gladly ran to do what he asked.
Meantime Jean was out on the gallery blowing a flute that M.Roussillon had brought him from Quebec. The pipe well filled and lighted apparently did have the effect to steady and encourage M.Roussillon's memory; or if not his memory, then his imagination, which was of that fervid and liberal sort common to natives of the Midi, and which has been exquisitely depicted by the late Alphonse Daudet in Tartarin and Bompard.
He leaned far back in a strong chair, with his massive legs stretched at full length, and gazed at the roof-poles while he talked. He sympathized fully, in his crude way, with Alice's lively curiosity, and his affection for her made him anxious to appease her longing after news from the great outside world.
If the sheer truth must come out, however, he knew precious little about that world, especially the polite part of it in which thrived those femininities so dear to the heart of an isolated and imaginative girl.
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